âTHAT IS NOT MY SONâ: SEAN GATHRIGHTâS MOTHER BREAKS DOWN AFTER HEARING HOW PROSECUTORS PORTRAYED HIM IN JULIO FOOLIO MUR-DER TRI-AL
đ âTHIS IS NOT MY SONâ: SEAN GATHRIGHTâS MOTHER BREAKS DOWN IN COURT AS JULIO FOOLIO MURDER SENTENCING TAKES EMOTIONAL TURN đ˘âď¸
An emotional and deeply tense moment unfolded Tuesday inside a Tampa courtroom as Damalie Lyle, the mother of convicted killer Sean Gathright, pleaded with jurors not to define her son solely by the horrifying murder case tied to rapper Julio Foolioâs death.
Taking the stand during the penalty phase of the capital murder trial, Lyle described her 20-year-old son as âa hardworking personâ and âa hardworking young man,â insisting the image prosecutors painted throughout the trial was not the boy she raised.

âHeâs intelligent. Heâs driven. He has a wonderful work ethic,â she testified emotionally before appearing to suggest that the portrayal of Sean presented in court âis not my son.â The statement quickly prompted Judge Michelle Sisco to intervene after a sidebar discussion, reminding Lyle that the jury had already determined her sonâs guilt and that the trial was now focused solely on sentencing.
In a rare and emotional moment, the judge acknowledged the pressure Lyle was under. âI recognize this is very stressful for you and scary,â Judge Sisco told her gently. âThe best thing you could do for your son is just express all of the wonderful characteristics about him, okay, and how deeply you love him and how deeply heâs loved by his family.â
Lyle then continued painting a dramatically different picture of Sean than the one jurors heard during the murder trial. She described him as caring, thoughtful, and unusually mature for his age. âAs a son⌠heâs helpful, considerate,â she said. âWhat he can do to make somebody smile or just to help out in any way.â
She explained that Sean preferred staying home with a small group of close friends rather than partying or chasing popularity. According to his mother, weekends often consisted of him sitting around the house talking with two or three longtime friends late into the night.
The testimony also revealed difficult family history. Lyle described Seanâs relationship with his biological father as troubled, claiming his father had a âvolatile temperâ and saying that tension was a major reason for their divorce.
Despite that environment, she insisted Sean was âsuch a good kidâ who rarely got into trouble and developed a passion for media, photography, and filmmaking during school. She told jurors he once dreamed of attending the LA Film School and hoped to work in film production.
The emotional testimony shifted during cross-examination when prosecutors highlighted Seanâs close friendship with codefendant Isaiah Chance â a relationship Lyle admitted never concerned her while they were living together.
Now, the same jury that convicted Sean Gathright in the killing of Charles âJulio Foolioâ Jones Jr. must decide whether he and his codefendants should spend life in prison or face the death penalty â a decision that could permanently alter multiple families forever.